Three Tips for Parents
to Put Away Their Phones
New research suggests your phone may undermine your parenting.
Here’s how to limit your own screentime.
Smartphones
are re-shaping family relationships. Right now, as I write in a coffee shop, I
can see a mom and dad captivated by their phones while their baby babbles to
try to get their attention. I’ve seen parents use their phones as
babysitters—and I feel empathy for them. Everyone needs a break, sometimes to
connect with other adults or just to get some work done.
But what
happens to children when their parents’ attention is diverted away from them
and is focused on their phones? Recent research validates what you might
already be thinking!
In
one study, researchers found that toddlers’ ability to learn
new words was derailed when their moms were briefly interrupted by a cell phone
call. In another recent study, 170
couples with young children completed questionnaires about how much they
perceived their mobile phone use was a problem and how often their devices
interrupted daily conversations or activities with their children. Parents also
reported on their children’s problem behaviors, from sulking to temper
tantrums. As expected, the researchers found that the more parents reported
phone-related interruptions, the more they reported their children displaying
both types of negative behaviors.
In a
different study, Brandi Stupica examined the effects of parents’
mobile phone use on their children’s athletic performance. She asked children
to run around the bases of a softball diamond under two different
circumstances. In one session, researchers told parents to pay attention and
respond to their children as they would normally, and turn their bodies toward
them. In the other session, they told parents to immerse themselves completely
in their phones and ignore their children’s bids for their attention while
keeping their bodies turned toward them.
The
researchers timed how long it took kids to run around the bases and they recorded
how often kids tripped, fell, stumbled, or made a false start for each of the
sessions. The finding? Children ran faster and were more physically coordinated
when their parents were available and responsive compared to when they were
absorbed in using their mobile phones.
Smartphones
are now a part of our lives, and most of us won’t be giving them up anytime
soon. However, this research suggests that we should exert some control over
our phone use, to minimize the potential negative impact on our children. But
how? Here are three tips that might help you out.
1. Put your phone in another room
when you’re trying to help your child learn something new
It’s hard
to resist the temptation to check your phone when it’s right beside you and you
hear the ping of an email notification—even during family time, even knowing
that the phone might affect your child’s development and your own happiness.
Kids learn best when responsive adults are teaching them because they can pay
attention to the same thing at the same time together. Having a predictable
rhythm during back-and-forth contact helps kids focus on what’s important.
The
solution is simple: Put your phone in another room. Or, if that’s not
possible, turn off your notifications.
2. Keep your phone in your back
pocket when you’re at your kids’ games
Athletics
are an important part of child development and more than half of American kids
are involved in sports. Kids not only notice when parents
aren’t available to them, they falter more than when a sensitive parent is
watching and cheering them on.
When
you’re on the sidelines of your children’s next soccer game, be available and
responsive in a way that makes them understand they are in your spotlight. Stay
positive, even about the opposing team, so that they feel that your
encouragement of them is your primary focus.
“We
should exert some control over our phone use, to minimize the potential
negative impact on our children”
―Maryam
Abdullah, Ph.D.
You might
take out your phone to take pictures or text your spouse that the game’s almost
over, but then put it back in your pocket. You can post those pictures on
Facebook after you get home. Watch your kiddo, not your screen.
3. Reflect on whether your phone
use might be related to conflict you’re having with your kids
Studies
suggest parents who are engrossed in their phones tend to respond more harshly to their kids’ misbehavior.
Children may be more inclined to engage in risky behaviors to get their parents’
attention, which might be linked to increased injuries when their parents are
on their cell phones.
Is any of
that happening in your house? Be honest. If it is, the solutions are
self-awareness and intentionality. Instead of mindlessly checking your phone,
you can do so only when you have a specific task to perform. Parents who aim to
disconnect regularly from their cell phone and begin practicing mindful parenting may find that they have
more positive interactions with their children as a result.
I
vacillate between appreciating my smartphone and wishing I could teleport back
to a time before phones. I’m probably in good company. There is no doubt that
smartphones create valuable opportunities for social connection. Sitting at
this coffee shop, I’ve also noticed a mom and her son posing together for a
selfie as they enjoy sweet drinks, which no doubt helps them to feel closer.
The trick for parents is to use their phones around their kids intentionally as often as possible—and that’s undoubtedly
tough for a lot of us to do!
BY MARYAM
ABDULLAH
https://greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item/three_tips_for_parents_to_put_away_their_phones?utm_source=Greater+Good+Science+Center&utm_campaign=e0acb26ee6-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2017_11_08&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_5ae73e326e-e0acb26ee6-51482775
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